The article announces winners of "The New Yorker" magazine's cartoon caption contest, which includes David Karatz, account manager at ESPN, Jonathan Inerfeld, manager of "Mindshare" and Linda Gamber, group advertising director of "Heart Magazines."...
"The New Yorker" presents the best of the cartoon caption contest. Write your own captions for the top 100 cartoon contests, then see the best, and all the rest.Since its inception in 1925, the "New Yorker" has been world famous for its cartoons. Not surprisingly, the cartoon caption co...
The New Yorker: Cartoon Caption Game is a 2006 party game from All Things Equal that is a part of the Balderdash-like family of games (this family includes games like Apples to Apples, The T-Shirt Game, Cards Against Humanity, and other games that task players with coming up with a cre...
as well as podcasts, videos, slide shows, interactive graphics, and the Cartoon Caption Contest. All readers are able to enjoy the home page, the front page of each section, the video hub, Goings On About Town listings, and six articles per month at no charge before being asked to subscr...
New Yorker cartoon. Caption: "We're all together watching television, but we're not all watching television together." 一起孤单地看电视 û收藏 130 12 ñ20 评论 o p 同时转发到我的微博 按热度 按时间 正在加载,请稍候......
Humor in Collective Discourse: Unsupervised Funniness Detection in the New Yorker Cartoon Caption Contest The New Yorker publishes a weekly captionless cartoon. More than 5,000 readers submit captions for it. The editors select three of them and ask the readers... D Radev,A Stent,J Tetreault...
Adams, George Wickersham, Gluyas Williams, Great Depression, Howard Brubaker, James Thurber, Janet Flanner, Jazz Age, Joseph Joffre, Lady Chatterley’s Lover, Lois Long, Nautilus, prohibition, Rea Irvin, Savoy Plaza, Stock market crash, The New Yorker, Thurber's first cartoon, Wickersham ...
still the dopey contest, but instead of real photos of winners, like the schoolmarmish “Miss Dorothy Shepherd” above, this ad featured a rather tawdry image of a model, more gun moll than schoolmarm… …on to our cartoonists…Ralph Barton, who was with The New Yorker from Day One, ...
New Yorker film critics, including John Mosher, generally found foreign films, particularly those of German or Russian origin, to be superior to the treacle produced in Hollywood, and Jannings was a particular favorite, delivering often heart-wrenching performances in such silent dramas as The Last...
…on to our well-known New Yorker cartoonists, we begin with the stalwart Rea Irvin… …accompanying part two of a three-part profile of New Deal Administrator Hugh Samuel Johnson was this terrific caricature by Miguel Covarrubias… …never too early to get ready for winter…spot drawing in...